[2]“O my Grief, my Grief.”
[3]The first part of the story of Ula and Urla, as Isla and Eilidh, is told in “Silk o’ the Kine,” at the end of The Sin-Eater. [The name Eilidh, is pronounced Eily (liq.) or Isle-ih.]
[4]Pronounce mogh-rāy, mogh-rēe (my heart’s delight—lit. my dear one, my heart).
By the Same Author.
PHARAIS: A Romance of the Isles.
(Frank Murray, Derby.)
(Stone & Kimball, New York.)
THE MOUNTAIN LOVERS: A Romance.
(John Lane, London.)